Data Sources
1
ILO / WB / OECD coverage
Employment-protection data from 1 official source — composite scores, notice periods, severance, and dismissal rules.
Timor-Leste — the verdict
Timor-Leste scores 55.2/100 on the World Bank B-READY labor-regulation quality index.
Sources: World Bank B-READY 2025. Higher = stronger statutory protection.
Timor-Leste carries moderate employment protection scores across the 1 international dataset we track (Asia-Pacific). B-READY 2025 labor regulation quality is 55.2/100.
Timor-Leste, located in Asia-Pacific, appears in 1 of the three employment-protection datasets tracked on PlainEmploy (ILO EPLex, World Bank B-READY 2025, and OECD EPL). The World Bank B-READY 2025 overall labor score stands at 55.2/100, blending regulation quality, public services, and process efficiency.
In practice, the World Bank estimates a full dismissal process takes about 2.7 weeks from start to finish. Third-party approval for an individual dismissal is not required, which materially affects employer flexibility.
Labor disputes take an average of 8.3 months to resolve through formal channels. Roughly 5.9% of firms surveyed by the World Bank report experiencing labor disputes, signaling how frequently these rules are exercised. Employer social contributions equal 0.7% of salary, a meaningful cost layer on top of wages. 6 direct country-vs-country comparisons are available below, letting you see how Timor-Leste stacks up against peers on the same metrics.
These figures draw on three different measurement traditions, so read each one on its own terms before comparing across countries. The ILO EPLex composite condenses statutory termination rules into a single index from zero to one, where higher numbers mean stronger legal protection against dismissal. The World Bank Business Ready 2025 labor score runs from zero to one hundred and blends the quality of regulation with how well public services and dispute processes actually work in practice. The OECD employment protection index uses a zero to six scale and only covers member economies, but it offers the longest historical series, which makes it the better choice for tracking reform over time. A country can score strictly on paper yet still process dismissals quickly, so always weigh the statutory index against the practical estimates. Where a country appears in fewer than all three datasets, treat the missing measures as not yet collected rather than as a sign of weak protection, and revisit this page when new releases are published because indicators can shift year over year.
Data Sources
1
ILO / WB / OECD coverage
Region
Asia-Pacific
Geographic grouping
Latest Year
2025
Most recent indicator update
Source: World Bank Business Ready 2025 World Bank Business Ready 2025 Pillar scores are 0-100 (higher = better regulation quality)
Timor-Leste has employment protection data from 1 source. World Bank B-READY labor regulation quality: 55.2/100.
Timor-Leste does not have OECD EPL data. Use the B-READY or EPLex scores above for comparison.
In Timor-Leste, notice is legally mandated. severance is legally mandated.
Timor-Leste is covered by 1 source: the World Bank Business Ready 2025 report (labor regulation quality, dismissal costs, and dispute resolution). Each source measures different aspects of employment protection, providing a multi-dimensional view of labor regulation.
Third-party approval for individual dismissal is not required. The dismissal process takes approximately 2.7 weeks.
Labor disputes in Timor-Leste take an average of 8.3 months to resolve. Approximately 5.9% of firms report experiencing labor disputes. Employer social contributions represent 0.7% of salary.
Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from OECD, ILO, and World Bank labor market databases. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.